355 collocations for print

" The good news that there was a kind friend willing to write to them gradually spread; and sailor after sailor wrote to Miss Weston, and their correspondence grew so large that at length she had to print her letters.

Even in the first year she printed 500 copies a month of her letters ("little bluebacks" the sailors called them, on account of the colour of their cover); but before many years had passed as many as 21,000 a month were printed and circulated.

They seem to have come late into England, for Caxton printed all his books on paper imported from the Low Countries; and it was not till Winkin de Worde succeeded him, in 1495, that paper was manufactured in England.

"How big a daily edition will you print, Patsy?" "Let's see," pondered the girl.

"I had intended to print all my poems in it, and I'm sure that ought to make it worth at least five cents a copy.

The book contains 285 pages, is printed on a fine quality of | | tinted paper, is handsomely bound, and is sold by all | | booksellers for $1.50, and sent for the same (postage paid)

In response, she printed the words "I believe so.

These he contrived to explain to his readers, by annexing to his volume for 1738, feigned proposals for printing a work, to be called Anagrammata Rediviva.

Kossuth was present at the Diet of 1832, when the Government, which conducted itself most brutally and arbitrarily toward the press, refused to allow the newspapers to print reports of the deliberations of the Diet in spite of the repeated urgings by the Deputies for such an authorization, and it was owing to his ingenuity that this prohibition was evaded.

Following quartos I have printed these lines (which 1724 gives as prose) metrically, although I confess the result is not satisfactory. p. 297, l. 1

So we had our little outrage all to ourselves, although strange tales went the rounds of the Holy City that night, and two weeks later several European newspapers printed a beautiful account of a midnight massacre of Jews.

If Bob West sells a plow we've got to mention the name of the farmer who bought it; if there's a wedding, we'll make a double-header of it; if a baby is born, we willwill" "Print its picture in the paper.

Lamb printed this sonnet twicein 1797 and 1818.

But as the English and American Press have already printed long passages from it, it is practically possible to give it in its entirety without adding anything to what has already been printed.

"Hunt up the best supply house and have them send me a complete outfit to print a daily newspaper.

I only wish that he would put his threats in execution, and, if he prints his play, I will forgive him.

Probably the two motives which have inspired Germanyofficial and unofficialto print many volumes on Belgian neutrality have been the indignation aroused in neutral countries and the fact that a complete German victory was not obtained in three months of war.

But to this objection, again, the Greek would have replied that he had been brought up in Constantinople, where they did things in that way; and that, except for the trifling obstacle of the law, there was no particular reason for not strangling Mr. Feist with the English equivalent for a bowstring, since he had printed a disagreeable story about Miss Donne, and was, besides, a very offensive sort of person in appearance and manner.

If you know Barbin, ask him why he prints so many things that are not mine, over my name?

In particular, I fear lest you should prefer printing my first sonnet, as you have done more than once, "did the wand of Merlin wave," it looks so like Mr. Merlin, the ingenious successor of the immortal Merlin, now living in good health and spirits, and flourishing in magical reputation, in Oxford Street; and, on my life, one half who read it would understand it so.

He printed his translation in Holland with some difficulty .

4to 1671 prints an unsatisfactory text: 'none for loving me, for I'm much unlike Lucinda whom you ey'd.' p. 344, l. 28

For if one has "an excellent approved remedy" that never fails, it seems unnecessary to print a list of twenty others for the same purpose.

Then Mathieu again caught his wife in a close embrace, printing on her lips a long, ardent kiss.

He could not have much charity for the most generous opponents; he certainly had none at all for those who (as he said) printed malicious and lying pamphlets against him "almost every morning," in which he found himself saluted as a "nest of perfidious vipers," "a night-flying dragon prince," "a flapdragon," "a caterpillar," "a spider," and "a butterbox.

355 collocations for  print